Sharing their time and money
- Share via
Marisa O’Neil
Suburbans, minivans and moving trucks filled with holiday gifts lined
up 20 deep Tuesday morning at the Orange County Fairgrounds for Share
Our Selves’ annual Adopt-A-Family Program.
Hundreds of volunteers hustled with carts and dollies to off-load
boxes of food, clothing and toys that will go to about 1,500 Orange
County families just in time for Christmas. Local residents,
companies and service organizations donated items for anywhere from
one to 77 families.
“SOS is such a worthy cause and this is so timely,” said Frank
Consoli, who adopted 10 families with his service group, OC Us in
Action. “It teaches us and our children that we can make a difference
and take a responsibility for our lives.”
Costa Mesa’s Share Our Selves provides year-round emergency
assistance for families in need. This is the 34th year for the
holiday Adopt-A-Family Program, which primarily serves families in
Santa Ana and Costa Mesa schools who would otherwise have little to
celebrate at Christmas.
In addition to connecting donors with needy families, Share Our
Selves provides food and toys for about 300 families.
“People get preoccupied with ‘orange’ alerts and things like
that,” said program coordinator Therese DeGroot. “Today we can be on
child alert.”
Donors who participate get a short description of the family or
families they are sponsoring, sometimes even including letters from
the children, DeGroot said. People can then buy items specifically
tailored to that family’s needs.
Tuesday morning, Share Our Selves volunteers had it down to a
system, directing traffic into the fairgrounds, loading labeled boxes
of gifts onto carts and stacking them in two large buildings, sorted
by school. Donations included bicycles, toys and giant boxes filled
with food.
“It’s kind of tiring but it’s fun,” 16-year-old Anne Rizzacasa
said as she ran with a dolly to unload more boxes.
Some local companies kept the volunteers extra busy with entire
truckloads of goodies. Teen clothing retailer Hot Topic, based in the
city of Industry, donated enough for 77 families.
“[Employees] used to do a gift exchange but we thought it would be
better to do something for other people,” said Amy Malone, a
department manager at Hot Topic’s head office. “Now we do this
instead.”
Last year, Hot Topic donated enough for 63 families, Malone said,
but each year of the six it has participated in the Share Our Selves
program, the group has challenged themselves to give to more
families.
Newport Beach residents Kim and Allen Yourman brought jackets,
games, school uniforms and food for a Christmas dinner for a
7-year-old and 11-year-old girl, a 13-year-old boy and their parents.
For confidentiality reasons, they will never meet the family, but
that just adds to the Santa spirit for some.
“This is the most Christmasy thing we do,” Kim Yourman said. “We
really enjoy this.”
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.